
""I'll get the one-to-one meetings sorted", Yteria offered. She was at the one and only meeting of the organising committee for the local Python group. There were five of them sitting around a coffee shop table meant for two people, laptops jostling for table space, balanced precariously at the edge of the table. They'd been a bit disorganised in getting everything sorted, and there was a bit of panic now."
"She had already enquired at the word shop how much it costs to buy "for". It wasn't cheap. But she had learned to adapt to speaking without using "for". She had also adapted her Python coding style well! This publication is entirely supported by its readers-there are no adverts, no sponsors! I'd like to continue writing and keep all articles available for free."
Yteria organizes a local Python group's networking hour requiring each participant to meet every other participant in short one-to-one chats. The organising committee consists of five people working around a cramped coffee shop table with laptops, creating a hurried atmosphere. Yteria offers to arrange the one-to-one rotas but cannot take on more unpaid work due to prioritised paid gigs. She has lost the word "for" and cannot speak, think, write, or type it, and she has adapted both her speech and Python coding practices to cope. She needs code that accepts a list of names to produce the rotas.
Read at Thepythoncodingstack
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